Metric space

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Revision as of 01:23, 3 September 2007 by imported>Hendra I. Nurdin (Added materials and a See also)
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In mathematics, a metric space is, roughly speaking, a mathematical object which generalizes the notion of a Euclidean space which is equipped with the Euclidean distance to more general classes of sets, such as to a set of functions. A metric space consists of two components, a set and a metric on that set. On a metric space, the metric replaces the Euclidean distance as a notion of "distance" between any pair of elements in its associated set (for example, as an abstract distance between two functions if the set consists of a class of functions) and induces a topology on the set called the metric topology. If the underlying set is also a vector space then the metric space becomes what is called a normed space.

Metric on a set

Let be an arbitrary set. A metric on is a function with the following properties:

  1. (non-negativity)
  2. (symmetry)
  3. (triangular inequality)
  4. if and only if

Formal definition of metric space

A metric space is an ordered pair where is a set and is a metric on .

For shorthand, a metric space is usually written simply as once the metric has been defined or is understood.

See also

Topology

Topological space

Normed space


References

1. K. Yosida, Functional Analysis (6 ed.), ser. Classics in Mathematics, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1980